Barna’s Newest Study: Church Changing 5

One nation under God? Perhaps, but new statistics released by the Barna Group, as part of its State of the Church – 2011 report, suggest that there is great variety of religious belief and behavior found across the country. The latest in a series of six reports that track changes in America’s religious nature since 1991 reveals that some of the old religious stereotypes no longer hold water. Deeper insight into those variations is accessible through a commentary by lead researcher George Barna at his blog site, georgebarna.com.

Changes in the Northeast Oddly, there has been limited change in Northeast in the past 20 years. The only three significant transitions have been the following:

Church volunteerism in the Northeast has dropped by 11 percentage points, from 23% in 1991 to 12% in 2011.

The proportion of unchurched adults in the Northeast climbed from 26% in 1991 to 41% in 2011.

Ironically, the likelihood of someone from the Northeast claiming to be a Christian rose by ten points during the 1991-2011 era, from 72% to 82%.

Changes in the South Similar to the Northeast, there was not a lot of religious change in the South over the last 20 years. There were statistically significant changes identified in regard to just four of the 14 items tracked.

Adult Sunday school attendance dropped in the South by 10 percentage points, to 21%.

Attending a church of 600 people or more became somewhat more common in the southern states between 1991 and 2011, rising from 10% to 17%.

Qualifying as an unchurched person – i.e., someone who has not attended a church service during the past six months, other than a special service such as a wedding or funeral – increased from 20% to 31%.

The only belief that sustained significant change was the 10 percentage point decline in adults who strongly agreed that the Bible is totally accurate in all of the principles it teaches. That dropped the figure to half of southerners (50%) who hold this point of view.

Changes in the Midwest The region with the greatest degree of religious change since 1991 was definitely the Midwest. Of the 14 religious variables tracked, 10 experienced significant change. Among the six religious behaviors, five saw a serious shift take place.

The biggest behavioral change has been the large reduction in church attendance in the Midwest. Pegged at 55% in 1991, average weekly attendance at a church service now stands at 40% in the central states.

Given the drop in weekly attendance, it is not surprising to find growth in the number of unchurched adults in the Midwest. However, the magnitude is substantial: a 50% jump, from 24% in 1991 to 36% in 2011.

Adult Sunday school attendance has declined in the Midwest since 1991 by seven percentage points, from 20% to just 13%.

Church volunteerism declined by nine percentage points in the Midwest over the past two decades, dipping from 30% to 21%.

Bible reading undertaken other than when attending a church event declined by seven percentage points since 1991. The current average in a given week is for 42% of Midwestern adults to read the scriptures.

Of the eight religious beliefs studied, five experienced significant changes.

Midwestern adults are less likely to describe themselves as Christian these days than was the case in 1991. The proportion slumped from 88% to 81%.

The percentage of Midwestern adults who contend that Satan is not a living entity but is just a symbol of evil declined by seven points, from 64% to 57%.

Those who strongly believe that the Bible is accurate in all of the principles it teaches dropped from 45% to 38%.

People’s views of God changed substantially since 1991, with a 13 percentage point drop in the number of Midwestern adults who believe that “God is the all-knowing, all-powerful and perfect Creator of the universe who still rules the world today.” That view was held by two-thirds of adults in the central states (65%) in 2011.

Despite the other indicators of deterioration in people’s connection with Christianity, the only region that experienced a significant increase in the proportion of born again adults since 1991 was the Midwest. There was a 10-point increase, rising to 42% in 2011.

Changes in the West Of the 14 religious measures followed by the Barna Group for this report, half of those showed statistically significant changes in the West since 1991. Among the six behavioral measures tracked, three saw meaningful shifts.

Church attendance among western adults dropped by 11 points, from 47% to 36% in 2011.

The proportion of unchurched adults rose from 29% to 46% in the West during the last 20 years.

Bible reading during an average week declined by nine points in the West, sliding to 34% in 2011.

The research concerning the state of the eight belief measures among people living in the West reflected significant change had taken place among half of those variables.

Adults in the West are now eight percentage points less likely to say their religious faith is very important in their life than was the case in 1991, when 57% made such a claim.

Since 1991, belief in an orthodox view of God has plummeted by 13 percentage points in the West, down to 58%.

The Bible is viewed less kindly in the West these days, as the research points to a 13 percentage point drop in those who firmly believe that the Bible is totally accurate in all the principles it teaches. Whereas four out of ten adults (39%) in the western states held that view in 1991, just one out of every four (26%) does today.

Fewer adults in the West now agree that Satan is just a symbol, not a living entity. There has been an eight percentage point drop in such a perspective, moving from 63% in 1991 to 55% today.

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Scot McKnight is a recognized authority on the New Testament, early Christianity, and the historical Jesus. McKnight, author of more than fifty books, is the Professor of New Testament at Northern Seminary in Lombard, IL.

Kate

These statistics by Barna seem rather pointless – just random numbers. It is difficult to dig any useful information – except of course that church is becoming less important to Americans.

No surprise – church is less a community and more of a consumer quantity.

http://LostCodex.com DRT

Kate is right if it is a consumer quantity. Do big numbers win?

There are two radically different uses for the statistics. One is to use them to indicate where the largest demographics are and that we should target them and try to appeal to them. I feel this is grossly incorrect.

The second way is to view them as an indicator of the strength of our methods in reaching each of the various communities within the US. This is a very different interpretation since this one recognizes that there will always be different communities with different amounts of power, and the challenge that Jesus put out there was not to appeal to the big numbers or powerful, but the needy.

The marketers and church growth specialists are sorely mistaken. We need to get back to helping the unheard, the powerless, the hungry. That is what will drive them back to the church. Believe in Jesus, not yourself.

http://newvintageleadership.com Tim Spivey

There is some really interesting stuff in there, Scot. However, I will admit that since his prediction of the imminent death of the megachurch, Barna’s interpretation of the data is something I view a bit more lightly. Having said that…Barna’s work is still appreciated and he remains one of the better sources for such information out there.

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